Close to the Bone in Exuma
Above the placid water, undersides lit by reflected turquoise, hung Caribbean clouds of awesome beauty . Inside a vast jewel of aquamarine light, our boat skimmed across the flats as lemon, nurse and bull sharks patrolled beneath us. Our destination was a mangrove fringed cove Once there, we climbed over the sides to wade in the warm water.
After a few casts both of our reels were screaming with running bone fish.
But wait. That’s not where
the story starts. It began a year ago.
Sadly, scuba diving a sport that had always
been our primary focus during out island getaways was now out of the
question thanks to a case skin bends my wife suffered at the Turneffe Island resort. Bone
fishing would have to take its place and a trip to
a Bahamian out island seemed like a golden opportunity to try our hand at salt
water fly fishing. We booked a
bargain vacation to San
Salvador , the island
made famous by an Italian explorer back in 1492. Club Med provided our accommodations. Its a seriously
cheap all inclusive where we would eat second rate food, drink third rate
booze and hopefully fish to our hearts’ content.
As the plane landed in the
sun washed tarmac, I was still bothered by the absence of fly fishing guides
but my fears were allayed when I spotted another guy getting off the plane with
a rod case. Upon striking up a conversation I discovered
he was and anesthesiologist named Steve from Massachusetts who also heard there was bonefish on the island. He had no more idea than I did about the
possibility of getting a guide. Still, things
were looking up.
After a the obligatory queue
in the tiny Bahamian customs building, the Club Med school bus met us for the
short ride to the resort. Having never
been to a Club Med before was taken aback by a little Mexican guy, the
resort’s resident comedian, in the yellow chicken suit waiting for us on the
bus. All the guests from the weekly
charter from Ft Lauderdale herded into an outdoor amphitheater where we received
our briefing from the village “Chief” about our all inclusive stay on San Salvador . The Chief
didn’t say a word about bone fishing.
The week long Club Med circus
had begun complete with young bilingual staff that was encouraged to dine with the predominantly
middle aged French speaking clientele each night.
The center of activity each
day was the swimming pool where staff member would lead vigorous exercises and
dances accompanied by blaring club music and screaming children. Each night after dinner the staff would don
costumes to perform dances and skits in the amphitheater.
Still, our week passed quickly punctuated
by several fruitless attempts by Steve and my self to find bonefish including
renting a beat up micro car and driving the pot hole strewn gravel roads to wade the salt
creeks on the far side of the island. Not only did we never see a bonefish, our last day we ran into a local biologist who revealed that there hadn’t been a
bonefish in Bonefish Bay for ten years.
So, shiny new rods and reels
and no bone fish: Now what?
Fast forward a year and it
was time for another island vacation only this time to Exuma, an island inhabited by
actual bone fish. Maybe Andros has bigger fish but Exuma has more of them and there's less
pressure. A quick check of the tourism website confirmed there were plenty of
bone fishing guides.
Now don’t get the idea that
Exuma is some secluded fishing lodge.
It’s a good size group of islands known primarily for is sheltered
harbor at its principal city of Georgetown and the grotto scene from "Thunderball" . It's a Mecca for sailors from all over the Caribbean , particularly in April when the Family Regatta takes place. During our visit in March 450
boats anchored in the harbor.
Their owners invariably complained about the high winds that had been
blowing that year. It had turned
sailing into an exercise of tucking in somewhere such as Georgetown harbor, waiting out the wind and drinking yourself into oblivion at the Chat n' Chill bar.
Since I at least could still scuba dive, our
first stop was Exuma Divers where I booked a couple of boat dives for the
week. After the diving paperwork was
finished I inquired about fishing and Tamara
one of the owners referred me to JJ Dames and his associate Herman Bowes.
JJ was busy so we’d be going
out with Herman, a lifelong resident of the island who used to have his own guide business until he lost his boat
to a hurricane that snuck up from the south and inundated his home on Harry Cay.
Now he helped JJ Dames when things got busy. At 8am sharp Herman picked us up at our cottage in his Chevy crew cab and we drove though Georgetown, which took
all of about sixty seconds. WE continued down the queens highway to Old Airport Road, aptly named because soon the gravel road turned into the cracked and weed infested
runway of an abandoned airport. Along the way
we passed two massive white radar domes that marked a high security surveillance station
jointly funded by the US and Bahamian governments. Herman told us it was no longer operational
but the chain link fence surrounding it was still topped with shiny coils if
razor wire. He wasn't sure if it the facility
was meant interdict drug traffickers or keep an eye on Cuba .
Just beyond was reached the lee side of the island and JJ’s "harbor". which was was no more than a
notch hewn out of the limestone just big enough for his two flats boats. Herman said
that the stone was soft and easy to cut.
It didn’t look that easy to me but at least it explained how the wind
and waves had sculpted the shoreline into fantastic shapes with hazardously sharp
edges.
JJ’s were classic flats boats, with a poling platforms
built above the massive Suzuki outboards.
While Herman readied our boat we strung up our rods and tied on the
gotcha flies we had bought the year before from a Orvis shop located in landlocked Lombard Illinois .. I showed the
flies to Herman, he approved, and with that we were off, skimming 40mph over
the glass smooth turquoise water.
The best time to fish was a
low and rising tide. That day the bonies were hungry
and anxious to get into the Mangroves and Herman
was anxious to start fishing ahead of the rising tide. He had an intent expression as he nudged the
throttle forward a notch. “We got to
catch this tide.” He said.
After twenty minutes he cut
the throttle and we idled into a mangrove fringed cove. Then he cut the engine entirely and unfastened
the flats pole from its clips. He
climbed atop the platform and began polling slowly across the marl. The hunt was on.
From my perch on the casting
deck I made a few clumsy casts and strip retrieves in the direction Herman
called out without actually seeing any fish.
“Keep the tip down.” Herman reminded. Then it happened. I felt the pull from another world on the rod. As the bonefish started his run as just as I felt
the adrenaline rise in my blood, the line went limp. The fish had broken off because I was
standing on the line. It wasn’t my fault
I thought. The wind moving the bow had wedged the line under my feet. Nevertheless I felt embarrassed as I tied on
another precious gotcha, precious because the only flies we had were those we
brought with us. None were available on
the island for love or money.
Thankfully it wasn’t long
before I hooked another and the fight was on. In our home waters we never need to get the
fish on the reel so I wondered how to transition to the reel here. I needn’t have worried. The bonies pull so hard that before you know
it all the slack line has gone in the direction of Cuba and the reel is screaming. Depending on the size of the fish the rum may be short or long. This one was
short. I reeled in and had another short run before the bonie gave himself up. We caught a few fish in that cove before it
was on to another where Herman told us the fish will hit anything you throw at
them. He was right. I tied on a crab and landed several as did my
wife. We were both out of the boat and
wading, both fighting fish at the same time, careful to not let our lines tangle.
Later I asked her how many fish she caught.
“I lost count,” was her reply.
Suddenly the bite was
off. The window of time when currents
and tide make fish bite was closed.
Still we continued our tour until found a cove full of schooling bonefish. They surrounded a lemon shark in a concentric
ring. As the lemon shark moved so did
the ring. I made several
casts into the crowd to avail. The
bonies were done feeding. Herman said we
were watching mating behavior. The only fish
interested in my fly was the shark. It followed
my retrieve but luckily didn’t strike. We
were running low on flies.
At three o clock were back at
the home made harbor. Since Herman, like
all the guides on the island didn’t accept credit cards so we stopped by an ATM on
the way back to our cottage. Over the
ten days of our trip I gave this particular ATM a steady workout. Turns out that was a costly was to do business. After the local banks fee and my
bank’s foreign transaction fees it was costing me almost 6% to get at my own
scratch. Note to self, bring a big wad of
cash on the next visit to Exuma.
Herman wouldn’t be available
the next day so we decided to try our hand at some DIY fishing. Most of the DIY fishing on Exuma requires a
boat or at least a Kayak. We had neither.
I did, however, find a blog that told us about one place where we could
wade in and catch bonefish. While that
seemed optimistic to me I thought we’d give it a shot. So next day we rented a micro car with tiny wheels
the size of dinner plate and headed out from our cottage. After a wrong turn on that took us into a
labyrinth of jeep trails. It was clear we had the wrong vehicle for the
situation. Thorn bushes that extended
into the road scratched our poor rental car’s paint like nails. Eventually we found the road that took us to
the flats. We parked the car, geared up
and began a thirty minute hike to what we hoped would be a Mangrove lined
channel. We could see Dove Cay far in
the distance. Because the sharp rocky shoreline it was easier to wade. Crabs darted from beneath out feet as we walked in the turquoise water.
Eventually the distance to
the Dove Cay narrowed to a Mangrove line channel and, as luck would have it, we
timed it right. The tide was
rising. The blog led me to believe you
could wade over to Dove Cay but the tide had already too high for that so we
stayed by the Exuma shoreline and began working likely spots where the bonies
could gain access to the Mangroves.
Before long we heard voices and looked uo to see a flats boat with two
fishermen aboard poling up the other side of the channel. Just then I caught a flash in the water not
far front of me and let loose a cast. I
lost sight of the fish but it hadn’t lost sight of my fly. After a few strips it hit it hard. The fish was quickly on the reel and taking most
of my fly line out of the spool. The
fish stopped running and I recover line.
He made another run, not so strong this time, and then I landed
him. I extracted the fly from his jaw
and with great pleasure watched him swim away. If the men in the boat saw me catch the fish
they didn’t acknowledge it. I started
to feel a little guilty for catching a fish without spending 400 dollars for a
guide, but soon got over it.
I didn’t spot any more bonefish
and after a while frustration and boredomst in. so much so that I made a blind cast and to my surprise I felt a strong tug
on the line. Having not seen the fish I had no idea what was on the other end of my line. My wife asked if it was a bonefish
and I replied, “I hope so”. Thankfully
it was.
My wife had no
luck on our DIY day. All she hooked was
a small barracuda that immediately bit though the tippet. Another fly lost.
We reeled in and began the
long slog back the car, wading in the uneven flats. Once we reached the car we were hot, exhausted
and looking forward to a cold Kalik beer and conch salad at Big D’s. That day we would have neither. The
tiny wheels on the rental car which somehow held up on the jeep tracks were no
match for a many potholes that infiltrated the main highway from the
crumbling shoulder. After I ruined a wheel on the first pothole I put on the compact spare. It was only a matter of
a few miles before we hit a deeper pothole that almost bent the wheel in half. Left us no other choice we abandoned the car on the side of the road and
hitchhiked back to the cottage. Words to
the wise on Exuma; Rent a jeep with big wheels.
The edge the main highway is lined with ravenous potholes and hugging
the centerline on the narrow road is in the face of oncoming traffic to avoid
them was like playing an unending game of chicken.
A few days later we were back
on the water with Herman. After launching
from the same makeshift harbor I could sense conditions were different. The tide was high and falling. Although he didn’t say it, Herman
knew we wouldn’t catch as many fish today bit he also knew that these
conditions could lead to larger fish. An
hour later, Herman was poling us along a channel where a river of tide was
flowing out of the mangroves. In
accordance with his instructions I made a cast to the two o clock position
and began stripping. Almost immediately
I felt the familiar tug. Then the carnival ride began. The previous bonefish would give a good run,
taking forty yards of line, but this one must have been shot out a cannon. It
was all I could do was hold on as all the line disappeared from my reel and 60
yards of the florescent backing stretched out in front of me. What a run!
Then I began to recover line, reeling in the backing some of the fly
line appeared on the reel. That was the
cue for the fish to run again, no so far, not so hard but still a powerful
surge. As the fish got close to the
boat, he spooked. Too tired for another run he resorted to dodging and weaving under
the boat, leaving me the challenge of keeping the line clear of the outboard
motor. Finally I was able to get him along
side where Herman reached him out of the water.
After a quick photo the fish was gently set free to terrorize the shrimp
and crabs of Exuma.
Soon I hooked another. I felt the same powerful pull and saw the same
long line of orange backing heading in the direction of Cuba . Sadly just as I began to reel in the line went
limp. The fish had broken off where I
had added tippet with a double surgeons knot.
Apparently it should have been a triple.
Nonetheless a lost fish and fly were a small price to get into a fight
with a good bonefish. Neither of us
hooked any more fish for the rest of the day but the time spent gliding along
the mangrove fringed cays under the aquamarine clouds of Exuma remains one of a
favorite experiences on the island.
Rest assured that before leaving Exuma we rented a substantial SUV and finally made it to Big D’s. It was the best conch salad on the island.
When we had the rental car we picked up all the
hitchhikers we could. This is common practice on the Exuma. As we got to know them we fell deeper under the island's spell. As disappointing as our trip to San Salvador was with its programmed resort, the trip to Exuma was
one an all time favorite. When we returned home I carefully rinsed the salt from the rods and reels before I stored them so they'll be ready for our next Exuma expedition.
Where exactly is Dove Cay? I'll be in Exuma next month and looking to do some DIY fishing. Thanks
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